The Fearful Part

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

There is an exercise in the book “No Bad Parts” by Richard Schwartz that asks the reader to close their eyes and imagine walking down a welcoming path, no matter where that path might be. The caveat is to try to leave all your hurt “Exile” parts at the trailhead, reassuring them that you will be back soon and that they are safe to hang out. 

The author spends some time explaining that your inner hurt ‘exiles’ may not be ready to be left alone and that it is okay for you (your ‘self’ /real adult) to stay with that hurt child/children to either to get to know them better and/or to reassure them that you, the adult self, are there to protect and care for them. That you, your adult self, is capable of handling whatever situation might arise.

There is an exercise in the book, “No Bad Parts” by Richard Schwartz, that asks the reader to close their eyes and imagine walking down a welcoming path, no matter where that path might be. A path of your choice. The caveat is to try to leave all the parts of you that are hurt “Exile” parts at the trailhead, reassuring them that you will be back soon and that they are safe to hang out. 

All that to say that my response to this exercise was surprising to me. Maybe it is because I have done so many years of Alanon-type work in allowing myself to care for all the hurt parts of me and to ‘detach’ from the person or people that are causing me pain in the present. It is the biggest feat in finding serenity, no matter what the addict or other(s) are doing or causing. To know you ‘got this’, and will be all right regardless of the outcome of the behavior of other(s).

My response was to skip down that path feeling freed from all the pain and restraints of those hurt parts. It’s like the part(s) had evolved enough to allow me to go forward without them, at least for a time.  It was freeing to feel light and carefree and stable. I felt truly able to care for myself on that path, even though it was a  (real) path I have hiked, one with many bumpy areas, drops and crevices. That path is at the seashore and leads to a wonderful wild beach where few visit.

I felt excited to bound along it. I felt that my hurt parts were finally able to let me enjoy my life and explore without having to cling to me. They felt like my cheerleaders instead of my burdens. They were actually happy for me.

It was marvelous.

This is not to say that I do not have a hurt part of me still rear her little head at times. I was conveying an incident from my young childhood..maybe three or four–in which I decided to try to help my mom and bring in the milk bottle from the porch (back in the days when the milkman delivered). I felt so grown up and helpful. Well, in my excitement, I failed to notice the screen door did not clear the milk bottle. You guessed it, the bottle broke. 

My mother was so angry at what she saw as my carelessness, that she sent me to my room and made me get coins out of my piggy bank to pay her for the spilt milk. Who knows how bad of a day she was having, but this crushed me. It implanted in me the tendency, to this day, take on responsibility for errors, or even perceived possible errors, as my fault. It brings up that mortified little girl. My goodness, I just want to hug her.

Because of the opportunity of this exposure to ‘parts’, I have been able to see that little mortified helper child and realize that she still lives within me. I can truly tame her fear and guilt when I recognize her. 

I used an example of present day. I run an air bnb out of our home. Occasionally a guest will either rate us lower than top ‘5 stars’ or will complain about something like the room temperature or not enough of the kind of tea bags they prefer available. My first impulse is to feel fear and to feel wrong/ careless. I feel that I should have known to realize whatever their complaint is about before they had to voice it. That I am that little girl who, even with the best of intentions, was seen by her mother as naughty and thoughtless.

Oh my goodness, what a revelation. What a gift to be enabled to pause and hold that little girl part in high esteem as valuable and good, so that I can move forward in my grown up self to deal with the issue at hand with vastly reduced fear/guilt reaction. I can now allow present reality to sink in, freeing me to behave in a more realistic evaluation of the situation and put it into perspective. I am a well meaning, valuable person who would never intentionally harm another. I am enough.

Counterfeit

Photo by Anna Tarazevich on Pexels.com

adjective

made in imitation so as to be passed off fraudulently or deceptively as genuine; not genuine; forged, pretended, unreal.

noun

an imitation intended to be passed off fraudulently or deceptively as genuine; forgery.

Is my marriage an imitation? Is a person who has lived under the belief that their spouse is faithful and operates in their best interest living a counterfeit life?

I grapple with this concept—this reality.

While it is paramountly unfair to control another person’s reality through deceptions and lies–it is real. It did happen. I was betrayed hundreds and thousands of times over the twenty seven years my unfaithful spouse partook in feeding his bottomless need for praise and affirmation and control (even if that praise and affirmation was also false–offered by another person who would sell their soul to get the same counterfeit affirmation in return.)

I was living in a relationship that was being controlled by my unfaithful spouse. I could have caught an STD at any time from him. The reality of his betrayals could have been discovered at any moment, shattering my heart and my children’s world. (But that is what made it so exciting and forbidden for him—sick) He could have lost his commission in the armed forces and his retirement pay through court-martial. He could have been prosecuted for embezzlement. All could have’s. All should haves. All, through pure dumb luck, did not come to fruition.

The news has been full of talk of accountability as of late. Should the person who abused his power be held to task? Should he lose his ability to ever run for office again? Should he lose his retirement benefits?

Our human justice system is inherently flawed. No human being can know the heart of another or the flawed, distorted thinking that led them to choose destructive actions. When we judge we always run the risk of judging inaccurately.

Does that mean we should excuse the inflicted wounds of others if they cause life altering damage, even death? What is appropriate accountability? How does a perpetrator repair unrepairable damage? He can not bring back the dead. He can not restore years lost to deception. He can not restore the human rights to self determination lost through those years. Some choices are unrepairable.

So how do we limited and flawed human beings hold another limited and flawed human being to account?

In my experience, it is an imperfect and incomplete undertaking. That does not mean it should not be undertaken. Damage that will effect the victim’s life for the rest of their life demands equal reparation. An adulterer owes a lifelong debt to their victim(s) as there is no way to restore them to their pre-perpetration selves.

I will always have triggers–reminders that I was used like a disposable tool in dozens of ways–for years. He can never fully repay me—not monetarily, not emotionally, not spiritually, not physically. I am an altered human being—damaged, scarred for life. I can not un-remember or unknown how I was intentionally put at mortal risk and my supportive trust used in my own wounding. There is no way for a human being to repay such atrocity.

So where does that leave me?

Bitter… or

Compassion.

Grace.

Walking the hard road toward forgiveness. Learning to remind myself with each trigger, each reminder, each metaphorical gut punch, that this damage was forced upon me by a severely damaged person.

“Don’t allow an old wound to close your heart.”

My wounds will heal. They will leave scars. Lifelong scars. I will never be able to look upon my marriage as mutual. I will always remember I was betrayed in thousands of ways that are bound to come up in the normal course of my life in the form of triggers/reminders. And it is my imperfect, unreachable job to forgive each and every one as they happen.

Forgiveness is not a one time event. It is a day in, day out, hourly, sometimes minute by minute choice to remind myself that the wounds I have suffered were inflicted by a damaged, broken person. Another human being who needs compassion—like every human being does. We all need to be treated with compassionate kindness. As imperfect persons who inflict our own damage, we need compassion if we are ever to be able to improve ourselves. To have space to do better. The human right to grow—to live.

So yes–my marriage was counterfeit from the moment my unfaithful spouse crossed the line–onwards. The contract was broken irregardless of my ignorance of the breech. And that is also my job to grieve. It is supremely unfair. It is reality.

Who Are Your Back Seat Drivers?

Photo by Justin Hamilton on Pexels.com

Most of us who have experienced betrayal have, at least for a season, anger as our front seat driver.

So who is riding in the back seat, fueling our angry driver?

Fear? Frustration? Betrayal, Sadness? Loneliness?

Who are your backseat drivers?

Once I uncovered loneliness and injustice as two of my backseat driver emotions, I discovered that loneliness/unjust judgements were part of my childhood– when I struggled to be the ‘good child’ as my parents were trying their best to handle a difficult son, my only sibling.

More damaging than that was my mother’s very human tendency to worry about me. Would I go down the same path as my er-do-well brother? Would I stay out late? Smoke pot? Lie and sneak?

Of course I knew that was not part of my character. Hey—I was the ‘good child’. I earned good grades, flew under the radar of the drug culture of my high school. I was not interested. I found those sort of choices scary, repugnant. I wanted to live a life of no regrets.

Why didn’t my mother know that?

Perhaps, in her heart of hearts, she did. I remember one evening she came after me, already upset, and accused me of planning to do the things my brother did. I went ballistic. So out of character. I NEVER went ballistic. (Good children are seen not heard) I railed, “How could you possibly think that of me?”

I was shattered. How could my mother, the woman who ostensibly knew me best, accuse me of these things I had not only never done, but would never consider? Why didn’t she give me the benefit of the doubt? No…more than that—why didn’t she praise me for all the hard work I actually did—all the ‘right’ choices, all the giving, loving behaviors?

Looking back, I realize she was under tremendous emotional stress with the challenges of parenting my brother. Special classes, principal office and counselor visits, rebelliousness, suspensions. He was in fact all that.

I was not.

My mother was having a melt down that had NOTHING to do with me. Just as my husband’s choices to betray had nothing to do with me. Both of these human choices, the foibles that led to my personal pain and destruction, were about their woundedness.

That incident of my emotional explosion highlights my character defect or sensitivity to unjust criticism. I have a lifelong trigger, if you will, to being accused of intentions I do not have. In my mind, I work too damn hard at being a good responsible person, to be cast in such a negative light. Such aspersions cut me to the core. They break my heart.

And so the revelation of my husband’s years of infidelity–sexual, emotional and financial, quite understandable and naturally sunk a dagger into my invested, responsible, loving, giving, hard working heart. His casting blame on me for not being enough for him–“What did you expect? You didn’t have enough sex with me?” –ripped the thin scab off the wound of ‘not good enoughness’ present from MY family of origin. All the criticism poured over me by a mother who felt that was the road toward molding a good citizen (me), was in a instant, proven ‘right’.

At least that is how it felt.

How could a man who had benefitted from all my care, my support, my huge investment in home, children and him, choose to abandon our marriage? I knew I was more than enough. I knew I was an excellent housekeeper, employee, mother and wife.

Volcanic rage, held in check– to be told I was not.

This rage did not come out immediately. Oh no. Good, responsible Christine had to see to the hearts of her adult children who had just been devastated with the news. (Yes–their father told me of his long term affair in front of them) It took me many weeks of torrential tears, sleeplessness, agony and sadness to get to the underlying rage.

I journaled that rage. Pages and pages. I filled notebooks. In moments of isolation at home, I would verbally rage at the imaginary him. I spent months and months venting this powerful, very human reaction to being betrayed. Oh the injustice of it all!

…Until the energy of that injustice lessened.

The sadness is still there. The pain resurfaces sometimes when I am tired, hungry, lonely. The difference is that now I have allowed myself the time to grieve. Yes grief. The anger of the injustice of being ‘judged and (my character) executed through betrayal has been vented. Revisiting that anger is less and less powerful.

e- motion= energy in motion. It has taken enormous energy to vent.

As an adult, I can find healthy ways of coping with, mitigating and healing my sad loneliness….and my anger. These methods may include, but are not limited to: therapy, support groups, 12 step, safe friends, going to church, prayer, meditation, exercise, gardening, and other fun hobbies such as painting, writing, reading.

This helps me to relieve my loneliness as I heal, mostly alone, and thus disarm it from influencing and ‘driving’ my anger.

These four and a half years have been the hardest, most painful of my life. They have also provided opportunity toward the most personal growth. I have been put in my own driver’s seat toward healing. And I knew I didn’t want that seat to be forever occupied by a raging, bitter woman. I needed to really believe exactly who and what I am, despite other’s beliefs and actions.

This life experience has reinforced the truth. I am a good, invested, giving and loving person who has been misjudged, accused, tried, found guilty and treated as someone guilty of –something I am not—by a person wounded by his own life circumstances projected oh so painfully onto me.

His inability to see my love in no way diminishes the reality of all the years of caring, giving, support—LOVE that I gave. Hey—I AM that loving person who would no more harm, ignore or abandon my family than I would fly to the moon using my arms. I gave all I had to give. I lived my life as a loving person.

That is reality.

And the broken accusations and behavior of another–even if that ‘other’ is my mother… or my husband, can make other’s beliefs and pursuant behaviors just–or based in truth.

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

When ‘Good’ Things Go Bad

Photo by Craig Adderley on Pexels.com

My UH has been trying to take on more actions toward getting things accomplished. I have requested, for years, that he maintain his own list or method ‘tool’, as he would do at work, to facilitate his participation in the household responsibilities. He is ADD, but manages to use tools of accommodation for it at work. Why not at home?

BIG issue over the years.

He – under invested. Me- over invested.

Anyways– day before yesterday he arrived home (when he said he would by text– a good thing) wearing a Santa suit. He’s been talking about getting one for three years and in fact it has been on the list. So a ‘good’ thing, right? Not for my lizard brain PTSD nervous system. To take an action, even a ‘good’ one, then use a white lie “I’m swimming” he texted, to cover up that he was Santa suit shopping so he could ‘surprise’ me–not good for a PTSD nervous system. Not good to tell even a white lie when you have been lying for years and keeping secrets. Not good.

Yesterday he walks by me while I am painting and says “I’m taking in the Vespa”. WHAT? Although we have talked about getting the Vespa up and running again for four or five years, he did not run it past me that he wanted to do it now. He loves the Vespa, even though it is ‘mine’–given to me by him in 2007. (He rides it way more than I do–yeah, that kind of gift) We had agreed to put it off until we had expendable income. He got a refund of old pay a couple months ago–so he figures he can do this. All true. Good thing.

What is NOT good is when he goes ahead and acts without keeping me on the page. What is not good is when he ‘works’ on list things that are fun for him, but not on the list things that are less fun. You know, those responsibility things. Balance is all I ask.

So I sent him an email 4:25a.m because I did not want to wake him (even though I am triggered by my lizard brain and not feeling safe) and I wanted to organize my thoughts to present calmly and graciously. In the email I applauded his list efforts and explained how untenable any ‘surprises’ are for me and my PTSD lizard brain. Especially ones that leave me in the dark about actions (kind of part of the definition of a surprise/secret) I’ve told him not to surprise me any more. My nervous system gets triggered.

We’ll see how he reacts. Will he ‘get it’ and apologize/empathize or will he get angry/defensive/make it about him with some version of “I can’t ever do anything right” (shame- see photo of man in box looking like a caught bad little boy, above) All I can do is make a request. I am not responsible for how he reacts. I can only be gracious, reasonable, kind—and request.

Valentine’s Day Blues

Photo by Jill Wellington on Pexels.com

This is perhaps the most difficult holiday for a betrayed spouse to face. It highlights in full technicolor how deceived and lied to she has been, especially for those of us who are suffering from our spouse’s long term and/or multiple affairs.

It hurts to think of all the Valentines days my spouse undertook to meet some sort of expectations he felt pressured to meet during his infidelity. Sleeping with another woman, yet expected to give his wife hearts and candy? Hypocrisy at its worst.

No wonder the unfaithful hate Valentines day and see it as a huge trigger. It is but another reminder of how much deception they perpetrated on their unsuspecting spouse. What a lie any display of ‘love’ was during their cheating. How manipulative were the cards and flowers that kept their duped spouse in place and in the dark.

How great the shame. It is perhaps one of the most shameful things a person can do. Lying in solid three dimensional form.

Personally, I can’t stand the thought of more hearts and flowers when there has been no relational healing. He is unwilling to make amends, so any cards or gifts feel like a continuation of fake and manipulative. Trying to somehow convince me that he ‘loves’ me?

Love is not withholding amends, remorse, empathy, acknowledgement of the damage, etc. That is selfish self protection. More of the same. Self interest.

Trying to somehow smooth over that fact is cruel.

DOn’t give me flowers if you can’t give me remorse and reparations. They are more meaningless attempts to keep me serving you/extending you grace and patience. They are not apology. Apology is apology. Remorse is remorse. Flowers or candy or cards do not substitute.

Valentines Day has been a bad joke since 1990–sady, nothing has changed. We do not have a relationship that supports any Valentine’s Day recognition or celebration beyond what you would do or say to a colleague or acquaintance.

“Happy Valentine’s Day.”

Recent Post on Kobe

Photo by Wallace Chuck on Pexels.com

On the night of Kobe Bryant’s untimely death, I was inspired by all the philanthropic giving and the post-career investment in girls and women’s sports of the man. Yes, people were rightfully touting his amazing basketball career. Twenty years, all played with the Los Angeles Lakers. I was inspired by his second act comeback.

Perhaps we Angelinos feel the loss more keenly as demonstrated by all the news stories, the crowds gathering at the Stapels center, the Laker’s practice facility, the facility where his daughter played. SO much grief openly displayed. Words, flowers and tears of gratitude for the inspiration of the man.

And then the reaction on an infidelity site. I blog for this particular site–accepted as a handful of writers, by the administration, as someone who has thoughtful things to say. Occasionally I will post one of my personal recovery blogs on the general community forum there, as well. The night of Kobe’s death was one of those times.

I inadvertently touched a nerve with a handful. Kobe’s 2003 sexual assault allegation came flooding back to these readers. They shamed me for daring to post positive about the man, especially on a site where people are trying to recover from infidelity. They were triggered.

I honestly had forgotten about these charges. Perhaps it is because he was never found guilty, so it faded from my mind. I understand triggers. I understand being raw, especially in the early days, weeks and months after discovery. Perhaps it is for this reason that a handful were triggered into lashing out. I regret being the vehicle of anyone’s trigger.

As a betrayed spouse nearly four years out, I am in a place where I ardently hope that all unfaithful spouses who are working to become better people will be forgiven and given a new chance(s) to prove themselves. And so I am doubly amazed at Kobe for appearing to have done just that.

That said, none of us have an insight into anyone else’s personal life and heart. We are all reminded to look at actions in recovery to demonstrate healing and change. If one is to go on actions, I would observe a famous man who came back to finish out an amazing career, give time, talent and money to worthy causes, start a second act in upholding women’s sports, demonstrate extreme investment in raising his four girls. Perhaps the greatest testament to his change is his family. His wife, by all accounts, appears to have forgiven him, reconciled and gone on to have four daughters together. By all accounts he was a beloved father and husband. HE seemed to be the very definition of recovery and redemption.

And isn’t that what we who are investing our hearts and minds in sharing on recovery sites hoping for? Don’t most of us want our unfaithful spouse to heal and go on to do good in the world? Don’t we work toward forgiveness and grace? In the end, don’t we hope our unfaithful will be remembered for all the good they did. Not to diminish their poor choices, but as a testament to what is possible in a truly repentant heart. Did Kobe get off because of his fame or finances? I hope not. I pray not. But in this country a man is presumed innocent until and unless convicted. Do we damn a person for all time because of their mistake(s)/ moral violations?

I, for one, choose to look for the good in a man, but especially one who has fallen into such depths of depravity. (In Kobe’s case, admitted infidelity) It is a sign of what God can do in a humbled heart, if you are a believer. If not, it is no less amazing that a person who has done such destructive things can turn his life around for the good.

I believe in redemption. I work toward it, pray for it.

And isn’t that what we all pray for, wish for, aspire too?

______________________________________________________________

“Do not be dismayed by the brokeness of the world.

All things break.

And all things can be mended.

Not with time, as they say, but with intention.

So go. Love intentionally, extravagantly, unconditionally.

The broken world waits in the darkness for the light that is you.”

-L.R. Knost

Box It Up, Boxing Day Blues

Photo by Ma Boîte A Photos on Pexels.com

It’s Boxing Day, ostensibly to box up all the old decor and new gifts to stash away in proper place. Not sure too many of us still do this so quickly after Christmas. I know in my Catholic upbringing, we were to wait until Epiphany to take down the holiday glitter and lights.

“Epiphany is a Christian feast day that commemorates principally the visit of the Magi to the Christ Child, and thus Jesus’ physical manifestation to the Gentiles. Monday, January 6, 2020, this coming year.”

In our modern day culture most of us wait until the new year to clean house. From the perspective of Christmas Day, there is another night of revelry right around the corner and for those of us who have already used our balance of expendable energy and income, the dropping of the ball in Times Square is met with bittersweet anticipation.

Are we glad, we betrayed spouses, that our D-days are further distant in the rear view mirror? Sure. Of course we wish there were never the need for a d-day; that our spouse had chosen to be faithful to us, as they promised. But if I have learned anything in this blistering reality, it is that there is no turning back. This is our shit-show to deal with.

Welcome to a new year of recovery. Another 365 days and nights to plow through searching for the illusive new and better version of ourselves that is promised by all the recovery gurus, should we do ‘the work’. …Another unfair situation. We were betrayed and now we have years of work to heal, hoisted on our shoulders.

Nobody ever (truthfully) claimed life to be fair. In that arena, I’d say this infidelity stuff is about as unfair as it gets.

Reality. Yup–I know. Gotta face it. Gotta somehow learn to love it. I find that if I shift my perspective just a bit…nudge it to the right and look at this self reflection, this introspection as an opportunity rather than a burden–a chance to get to know myself better and like myself, respect myself more; then it is a positive indeed.

Life is, after all, about learning and growing into our best selves. This trauma has forced the issue and accelerated the process into a depth and breadth we may never have reached without it.

“But I could have had a perfectly happy life without this horrid betrayal,” I hear you (and me) thinking. Yes–so true. It is however, speculation at its finest to think we may not have been dealt a different brand of bad. And if we had not, we may have remained forever naive, trusting without a thought and living in a cloud of simplicity without ever having know of what we are made. Our mettle never tested to this extent, we’d not have chiseled a rough shod respect for the adult we are when the worst of what life can throw at us happens. We are amazing, strong women (and betrayed men)–more than we would ever dream, without this heartbreak.

So as we face the last week of the year, I plan to metaphorically box up as much of the burdensome old rehash of my misfortune that pounces upon me like a cat on a rodent. Place those triggers in a box marked “Stop”. You are living in the present and those memories are of thing in the past. Unchangeable and not to be revisited again. Goodbye and good riddance.

May 2020 come in unlike its twentieth century counterpart, ‘the roaring twenties’, and be a decade of peace, growth in our hearts, serenity and wisdom hard fought.

Peace.

Are You Thankful Yet?

Photo by Engin Akyurt on Pexels.com

This statement sets off a fury within me that makes me feel like my head will explode. Why? Because it sounds like being rushed and made to feel less than if we do not somehow become fifty shade of Pollyanna, skip through our days strewing rose petals in our wake and adding to a thousand page gratitude journal every night.

Worse of all is when this gratitude thing is expected in reference to infidelity. “My Husbands Affair Was The Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me”–a book written by one of the recovery community gurus—the title itself sets my teeth on edge. Yes–as you read through the book you get her perspective as to how asleep she was at the controls of her marriage and life. How naive she was.

Of course that is true for many of we betrayed, but to in any way imagine that it would take the life shattering betrayal of wedding vows to wake us up into realizing that we need to attend more closely to our communication and loving exchanges is a bit like saying heaven’s so wonderful you ought to hurry up, commit suicide and get on with it.

I am six and a half years into financial betrayal revelation and nearly four years past sexual betrayal d-day and I can NEVER imagine being grateful for one iota of these betrayals. They are hideous assaults on my life and personhood. I would not wish such on even the worst of the worst of humanity.

I will NEVER be grateful or thankful for being betrayed over and over for years.

I apologize if this statement rocks your world of perfect endings and assigning deep meaning to even the most egregious of life’s sufferings. It is my truth and I think I am not alone.

AM I thankful for the spotlight this atrocity has put on my personal strength and resilience? Yes. I always knew I was resourceful and tenacious, but this has proven it over and over again. I am titanium steel to have lived through this hell for so long. To be able to choose to look at and find the best in my world is another amazing feat of persistence and personal choice. It is not easy to steer your mind toward the positive when it is incessantly assaulted by triggers and the devastation of what your partner chose to do. And now what he chooses not to do.

Did he choose to do it to me? The closest I can get to thinking this true is to say that he chose to do it in spite of full knowledge that it could decimate me, our marriage, our home and our children’s security. I was and am acceptable collateral damage. Totally f”ed up thinking these addicts.

I will never be grateful for wisdom or strength gained at the expense of my personal heart and security. My marriage has been proven to be a sham perpetrated upon me for twenty seven of the thirty eight years it has been on record. Too bad no one told me until 2016 that I’d been played a fool and held to maintenance of one sided vows.

And there is nothing about that scenario for which I will ever be thankful.

P-L-E-E-Z-E.

Two A.M. Turning of the Clock

Photo by Acharaporn Kamornboonyarush on Pexels.com

YEs, we ‘fall back’ today and return to standard time, ostensibly giving us an extra hour of ?? Sleep?

Not in my world. I have an internal clock that pretty much wakes me up between six and a half and, if lucky, eight hours after I fall asleep. When there is a disruption in the time or a trigger I am dealing with, or a worry I am processing or something unknown I have not figured out—I awake, often long before the sun, far short of needed sleep quotient.

This is a phenomena since d-day. Is it really an internalized trauma response that does this? Has this new reality really destroyed my ability to sleep in?

I have no definitive answers. What I do know is, I never had sleep problems before the safety net of my spouse was yanked from under me. Interesting how living inside a lie can actually produce ‘ignorance is bliss’ effect. While I can not say I have had a blissful life, I have had one that felt pretty secure. Even in the worst of times when my UH was laid off for months at a time, I felt secure in knowing I could stretch a dollar, and worse come to worse—go to my dad for help.

Luckily, and with a lot of planning/discipline, that reality never materialized. I remember a few months, when my dad was our landlord, asking for a week or two more time to pay rent. That was about as far as my reliance on family safety net went.

My parents are gone, so I must rely on myself now. Even so, I have the comfort of a family home sans mortgage, low Prop 13 property tax rates and the money I saved while working in retirement accounts. I am not without resources.

That leaves the emotional abandonment as culprit. Knowing myself, I would say that is much more likely the case of my interrupted sleep. I am a person who needs intimate connection. While the interruptions are seldom very lengthy or debilitating, they are wearing. I never really know when I am going to have a shortened night.

I have a white noise machine now–it helps drown out extraneous noises. Very helpful. I also have a new mattress, sheets and cozy polar fleece blanket. Cool room temperature. shutters to block light–you know, all the atmosphere settings that contribute to good sleep.

So no, not an environmental problem.

Is this yet another cost of betrayal trauma? It seems so. It is hard being alone after forty plus years. It is not unlike widowhood, as I have likened it to before. Sudden, unwanted and devastating loss of spouse. So I guess I am not surprised that my sleep is effected.

It is not bad enough to take medication (and I dislike relying on medication), it is something to be managed, as is my emotional life. It is a new world of managing. Managing sleep, health, triggers, grief. What was normal, no longer feels normal. I am learning how to live with trauma and grief. It is a steep learning curve that saps lots of energy. It is what it is.

I expect this is my new normal. I will manage the effects of loss for the rest of my life.

My Psychological Cage

Photo by zhang kaiyv on Pexels.com
  • A difficult or disappointing past
  • A privileged or sheltered life, entitlement
  • Social influence
  • Pop-culture and mass-media stereotyping

The above are a few of the things that can put a person into the place of choosing selfish self medicating, such as an affair. Of course there are numerous other ‘medicines’ to escape reality for a short time. Over spending, over eating, drugs, alcohol, gambling, pornography, prostitutes.

Behavioral, or ‘process addiction’ is a form of addiction that involves a compulsion to engage in a rewarding non-substance-related behavior – sometimes called a natural reward – despite any negative consequences to the person’s physical, mental, social or financial well-being.

The thing is, healthier individuals also participate in activities that provide an escape from the everyday. You know– yoga, working out, running, meditating, tv watching, listening to music, dancing, drone flying, model trains—gosh the list could go on ad infinitum.

Anything, done to excess, even healthy pursuits can become unhealthy. The listing in the first paragraph are unhealthy from the get go. Why do people choose to alter their reality through drugs or commit personal or familial damage just to ‘escape’ when there are so very many healthier alternatives?

Fun, fast and easy. Drugs and alcohol require very little planning or effort. No particular thought or talent. Over spending and eating are in the moment rewarding, activating pleasure centers. Gambling–the thrill of possible wins. The sex related activities much the same—activate the pleasure centers of the brain–and oh the

a-n-t-i-c-i-p-a-t-i-o-n. (Cue Carly Simon. https://youtu.be/4NwP3wes4M8 )

The problem with these hyper stimulating activities and substances is their addictive quality. They are damn hard to stop. The lure is strong once the forbidden fruit is tasted. Even the seemingly strongest of men and women have fallen prey to their own desires gone awry. They literally risk their very lives to partake.

Insanity.

A psychological cage.

That which seems so freeing, such fun fast and easy escape will, sooner or later, become a cage.

A cage of guilt, shame, obesity, addiction, poverty, lost marriage, children, family, life. For what? Short term pleasure. Long term anticipation….and consequences.

Insanity.

Some cages have no bars, but are life altering, diminishing, destroying, nonetheless.

___________________________

What about the victims of the fallout of the above person’s choices? We are left to clean up the mess, if only in our mind. PTSD is rampant in the intimate betrayal recovery community. Years of counseling. Mind movies of the betrayal. Triggers. Pain. Anger. Depression. Grief. Sadness. Isolation. Loneliness.

A Psychological Cage… with the door wide open.

Should you choose to escape. A tincture of time and a daily choice to be present and grateful for all the good, all the beautiful, all the positives. Be kind and patient with yourself…and choose you.

Caged Bird

BY MAYA ANGELOU

A free bird leaps
on the back of the wind   
and floats downstream   
till the current ends
and dips his wing
in the orange sun rays
and dares to claim the sky.

But a bird that stalks
down his narrow cage
can seldom see through
his bars of rage
his wings are clipped and   
his feet are tied
so he opens his throat to sing.

The caged bird sings   
with a fearful trill   
of things unknown   
but longed for still   
and his tune is heard   
on the distant hill   
for the caged bird   
sings of freedom.

The free bird thinks of another breeze
and the trade winds soft through the sighing trees
and the fat worms waiting on a dawn bright lawn
and he names the sky his own

But a caged bird stands on the grave of dreams   
his shadow shouts on a nightmare scream   
his wings are clipped and his feet are tied   
so he opens his throat to sing.

The caged bird sings   
with a fearful trill   
of things unknown   
but longed for still   
and his tune is heard   
on the distant hill   
for the caged bird   
sings of freedom.